Been There, Dunn That

Angela Dunn-Cartledge

Grief and trauma can be part of your story, but you can grow through them. Despite what we tell ourselves, we can live with grief and trauma and walk hand in hand with them through life. Let's help others together by telling our stories.

  1. Ep 2.33: Grief Literacy, Ritual, and Belonging

    11/06/2025

    Ep 2.33: Grief Literacy, Ritual, and Belonging

    In this deeply grounding conversation, host Angela Dunn-Cartledge talks with death doula, grief guide, and ritualist Alyssa Ackerman about building a grief-literate culture—before and after loss. We explore why untended grief behaves like trauma in the body, how pre-existing connection boosts resilience, and practical ways to create containers that let us ask for what we need. Alyssa walks us through community grief tending, the “no fixing, no advice, no cheerleading” agreements, and ritual as an everyday practice of remembrance and integration. We also touch the sister-threads of grief and regret, how to hold presence without absorbing someone else’s pain, and Frances Weller’s Gates of Grief as a map back to belonging. Key Takeaways Grief is woven into all change—not only death; untended grief can mirror trauma.Connection before crisis matters: stronger social ties → faster recovery, less PTSD.Build a care team (listeners, laughers, “been-there” folks) before you need it.Create containers: time limits, consent, and clear asks (“Please just listen,” “Call me weekly about my mom”).In circles, practice presence over rescuing: no fixing, advice, or cheerleading.Ritual (altars, food, music, nature, movement) helps us remember and integrate, not erase.The Gates of Grief (loss/impermanence; unloved parts; sorrows of the world; expectations unmet; ancestral grief; and the harm we’ve caused) widen literacy and compassion.You can be with big emotions without absorbing them: breath, body, nature, after-care.You can find Alyssa on her website, on Instagram and on this Tedx Talk.

    54 min
  2. EP 2.31: Laughing Through the Hard: Comedy, Crisis, and Not Giving Up

    10/23/2025

    EP 2.31: Laughing Through the Hard: Comedy, Crisis, and Not Giving Up

    Angela sits down with writer, stand-up comic, and professional “build-your-own-table” human Amanda Graham for a raw, funny, and fiercely honest convo about breaking into TV/film late, navigating gatekeepers, living through “the wilderness years,” and choosing hope when life keeps piling on. Amanda shares how discovering she’s autistic (and likely ADHD) reframed her direct communication style, why she stopped tap-dancing for approval, and how she’s “punk-rocking” her book after publishers said, “This is brilliant—who is she?” You’ll hear practical encouragement (10 minutes a day changes the ship’s course), a reframe on goals (chasing the why more than the trophy), and a tender peek at the children’s book about a lonely goldfish finding connection. Takeaways: Build your own table: Stop proving yourself to rooms that don’t get you; find your people and create momentum.Direct ≠ destructive: Authentic, truth-first communication can clash with industry norms—own it anyway.Grief in the creative grind: We grieve lost time, unpaid labor, and moving goalposts—naming it helps us keep going.Start “late,” start anyway: Audacity compounds; consistency (even 10 minutes/day) is the real accelerant.Chase the why, not the trophy: Let the deeper intention (making people feel less alone) guide the path.Hope as fuel: Even when life is brutal, noticing your still-flickering light is the first step out. Work with Amanda through her ⁠website⁠ and ⁠Threads⁠ (where I found her). She's also on ⁠LinkedIn⁠, ⁠Instagram⁠ and Facebook.

    44 min
  3. EP 2.29: Secrecy, Shame, and Identity: What Adoptees Need to Heal

    10/09/2025

    EP 2.29: Secrecy, Shame, and Identity: What Adoptees Need to Heal

    Angela and Hadassah dive into adoptee secrecy, shame and identity, the power (and pitfalls) of the story we tell ourselves, and how to move from rumination to repair. Hadassah explains her “tell the true story, then heal it” approach, why secrecy fuels shame, how to prepare emotionally before a search/reunion, and what open vs. closed adoption looks like in practice. Angela shares her family’s embryo-adoption path, the complexities of medical history and openness, and the importance of telling children their story early and often. Takeaways: Story vs. facts: Many of us “add” to our stories over time. Separate facts from interpretations, then write a new, healing script. (≈ 02:00–05:29)Ruminating keeps us stuck: Getting the story out is essential—but staying in it reinforces a victim identity. (≈ 02:00–03:27)Identity & genetic mirroring: Not seeing yourself reflected in family can complicate identity formation for adoptees. (≈ 16:53–18:39)Secrecy → shame: Closed records (e.g., the “Adoption-Sealed” era) deprive adoptees of agency and health info; reforms are improving access in some states. (≈ 07:34–09:35)Reunion readiness: Do inner work first; not everyone who’s found wants contact. Decide boundaries before you engage. (≈ 09:35–12:42)Tell kids early: Delayed disclosure can trigger profound identity rupture and betrayal. (≈ 18:39–20:38)Embryo adoption nuances: Gestational bonding matters; carrying a child can lessen certain layers of early separation trauma, while genetic disconnection still brings questions. (≈ 25:08–27:25)Forgiveness: It’s multi-directional—birth parents, systems, self. (≈ 05:29–07:34)How to work with Hadassah on her ⁠website⁠On ⁠Instagram⁠ & ⁠Facebook⁠Through her Adoptee-focused journal with guided prompts (available on ⁠Amazon⁠)

    28 min
  4. EP 2.27: When You Stop Fighting: Choosing Life, One Day at a Time

    09/25/2025

    EP 2.27: When You Stop Fighting: Choosing Life, One Day at a Time

    TRIGGER WARNING: This episode includes candid discussion of addiction and suicidal ideation. Please listen with care. In this powerful conversation, host Angela Dunn-Cartledge sits down with author and speaker Daryl Dittmer to unpack the long, honest work of recovery and resilience. Daryl shares how a downward spiral through his teens ended with a life-or-death crossroads on New Year’s Eve 1984—and how treatment began his second act. From the mentor line that changed everything—“When you stop fighting, the fighting stops”—to Step 11, gratitude, and daily practices, Daryl offers a practical, compassionate roadmap for anyone ready to put the shovel down and climb out of the pit. You’ll hear about The moment Darrell chose to live—and why “attempting to try” is enough to start“Clearing the wreckage”: responsibility without self-hatredStep 11’s role (prayer & meditation) in day-to-day sanityThe routines: breathwork, meditation, gratitude, movementHow writing/journaling helps you see patterns and track progressForgiveness vs. forgetting: letting go without minimizing the past“First things first—and the rest shall be added on”Find the author: Books by Daryl Dittmer: ⁠When I Stop Fighting⁠; ⁠When You Stop Fighting⁠ (audiobooks in his voice!) on AmazonJournals on his ⁠shop⁠: Rewrite Your Life Story; Stop Stopping Yourself; Stop Fighting, Start Living⁠www.daryldittmer.com

    44 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Grief and trauma can be part of your story, but you can grow through them. Despite what we tell ourselves, we can live with grief and trauma and walk hand in hand with them through life. Let's help others together by telling our stories.